The Institute’s first event of 2020 will take place on Wednesday 22
January, starting at 7.30 pm in the in the library of the Institute
(Dionysiou Aiginitou 7, ground floor, Ilisia. Metro: Megaro Moussikis).
Dr Maria A. Liston (Associate Professor, Anthropology Department,
University of Waterloo) will give a lecture entitled, “A Tale of Two Wells: Mothers, Midwives and Perinatal Death in Athens and Eretria, Greece”.“The death of one or more infants would have been a nearly universal
part of the lives of women in Ancient Greece. Yet until recently, other
than a very few burials of women and infants together, there has been
almost no evidence for this. Infant remains are rare in cemeteries of
nearly all periods. However, the analyses of two wells in the Athenian
Agora and Eretria, Euboia provide some of the first evidence for
perinatal death and the decisions that were made regarding infant
remains. They offer insight into the role of midwives, the interventions
that could take place in difficult births, and the causes of infant
death. We cannot know how much agency the mothers had in the decisions
made about their infants, but these remains provide unusually detailed
evidence for the practice and outcomes of childbirth, a central event in
the lives of ancient Greek women.”
You are all most welcome to join us next Wednesday for what promises to be a most interesting presentation.Jonathan Tomlinson
Assistant Director
No comments:
Post a Comment